Identification of a novel nifH-like (frxC) protein in chloroplasts of the liverwort Marchantia polymorpha

Abstract
The frxC gene, one of the unidentified open reading frames present in liverwort chloroplast DNA, shows significant homology with the nifH genes coding for the Fe protein, a component of the nitrogenase complex (Ohyama et al., 1986, Nature 322: 572–574). A truncated form of the frxC gene was designed to be over-expressed in Escherichia coli and an antibody against this protein was prepared using the purified product as an antigen. This antibody reacted with a protein in the soluble fraction of liverwort chloroplasts, which had an apparent molecular weight of 31 000, as revealed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, in good agreement with a putative molecular weight of 31945 deduced from the DNA sequence of the frxC gene. In a competitive inhibition experiment, the antigenicity of this protein was indicated to be similar to that of the over-expressed protein in E. coli. Therefore, we concluded that the frxC gene was expressed in liverwort chloroplasts and that its product existed in a soluble form. The molecular weight of the frxC protein was approximately 67 000, as estimated by gel filtration chromatography, indicating that the frxC protein may exist as a dimer of two identical polypeptides analogous to the Fe protein of nitrogenase. The results obtained from affinity chromatography supported the possibility that the frxC protein, which possesses a ATP-binding sequence in its N-terminal region that is conserved among various other ATP-binding proteins, has the ability to bind ATP.

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